Yesterday morning I made up some little Easter baskets for the kids. Nothing big, only one egg of candy apiece and some fun stuff like modelling clay, disposable cameras, and tiny notebooks.

After I was done I sat them out on the table to await the children, observed my handiwork, and realized I should have gotten some stuff for me, too. Their baskets looked like fun.

The kids came in shortly there after, found the baskets, and leapt upon them with glee. The oldest paused and asked me, “What did you get?”

I replied, “I didn’t get anything.” Then with a melodramatic sigh, “I’m sad.”

At once he leapt up, ran to his room to get his allowance, and headed for the nearby mini-mart to get me an Easter treat.

I got good kids.

 

This morning, as usual, I did laundry. Put a heaping basket of the kids’ clothes in the machine, then when they were done I put them into the dryer and put a load of other clothes in to wash.

Dryer buzzed. Went downstairs, opened dryer door. Inside of dryer—drum, back wall, inner surface of door—is entirely covered with dark grey streaks.

We’ve been through this before. One of my sproggen left a red crayon in his pants pocket, and I didn’t catch it before it went through the wash. The washing machine was fine, but the inside of the dryer—not to mention all the clothes in that load—was entirely covered in red streaks.

It took a lot of work, but I eventually managed to get the red off both the clothes and the dryer. And the kids got an earful about checking their pockets to make sure they were empty before putting them in the laundry basket.

In this case the culprit was a black crayon. This time I sent the kids down with a bottle of spray cleaner to scrub the dryer for ten or fifteen minutes, just to give them an idea of how hard it is to get that crap off. Now we’re using the technique of spraying rags with WD-40 and running them through a dryer cycle; that worked fairly well the last time. (After that you have to run some clean, dry rags through the dryer cycle to clear off the WD-40 before you dry any more clothes.)

Before I had kids I never had any reason to know how to clean crayon streaks out of a dryer. Having a family sure is educational.

 

Even Bennie and Snooch are singing this song!

 

OMG I can’t get it out of my head now. Ever since watching Gman dancing to Dragostea Din Tei it’s been ping-ponging around in my skull. And I don’t even speak Romanian.

I blame Ginny. Damn you woman! Spreading your evil XM Radio meme!

Strange.

 Geek Wannabe, General  Comments Off
Mar 172005
 

My LJ mirror appears to be broken; my last couple of posts haven’t shown up there.

Mar 162005
 

…but it would explain so much.

Spent most of the day in the waiting room of a Doctor’s Urgent Care with a friend who’d hurt her back a few days ago. We figured we’d be there an hour, two at the most, but apparently there was a genuine emergency going on in the back that held up proceedings. We went there right after I’d taken Sprog #2 to school, and left shortly before it was time to pick up Sprog #1. Hence I didn’t get a whole lot done around the house today.

Still, I’m not complaining. I sat around a waiting room for four hours, but my friend sat around a waiting room for four hours in horrendous pain.

Mar 152005
 

Last week my son’s fourth-grade class went on a field trip to the Museum of Life and Science. At my son’s enthusiastic urging, I had volunteered to be a chaperone. God help me.

When we got to the museum, all the victims parents were given stickers that said “I’m a Super Chaperone!” to identify them in case they attempted escape. I was placed in charge of five kids (God help them) and the teeming swarm of fourth-graders broke up into smaller groups to explore the museum.

I don’t know how accurate my sticker was. At the risk of giving their parents retroactive heart failure, I was not a terribly authoritative chaperone. I told them, “Stay in this general area.” When we went upstairs, I told them to stay on the top floor. Then I let them all go their own way and look at whatever they wanted to look at, and alternated my time between glancing at the exhibits myself, and doing head counts to see where my charges were. “One, two… three, four… there he is, five.”

When we went to the gift shop, some of my group were far more interested in the googaws and trinkets than others. While a couple lingered in the gift shop, I instructed the remainder to stay in the nearby play area where a bunch of Kapla blocks were set out. (“Kapla” is apparently Dutch for “really expensive little block of wood.”) At one point I let the two girls go to the restroom—at the other end of the museum!—while I kept watch over the ones in the gift shop and the Kapla area. The extent of my supervision was to tell them to come directly back when they were done.

So I’m probably not the best chaperone there is. I’m not entirely sure what the chaperoning rules are; some groups seemed to be very disciplined, moving as a unit from one display to the next. I just ain’t that organized. I figure as long as I come out with all the kids I went in with, and there’s no permanent damage to either the kids or the museum, that’s probably about the range of my child-watching skills. And to that extent I was a success. Take that, all you perfect TV moms.

NOOOOOO

 Geek Wannabe, General  Comments Off
Mar 122005
 

Daniel’s dead again!

(I’m a week behind on Stargate.)

Mar 062005
 

I’ve been working on some site design for a friend of mine. It’s not like I’m an experienced web designer, but I work for free, which in this case is fairly important.

Having used WordPress on my site, I thought it would do the job for his fairly well—I’d let WordPress handle the advanced job of content management, leaving me to fiddle with the layout.

WordPress released a new version a few weeks ago. Might as well use the newest version, and as long as I’m at it, upgrade my own site.

Looks like WordPress made quite a few changes! I initially saved my old index.php file to use, but it turns out they’ve changed the setup so much that this wasn’t feasible—the old one didn’t work properly. So I’ve put in all the new files, and currently my site doesn’t look like my site because I haven’t got around to fiddling with the default layout. Instead I’ve been re-inserting my ljautoupdate hack, which lets me post simultaneously to my blog and to livejournal. This would be better as a plugin so I wouldn’t have to redo it every time there’s an update, but hell, it’s not like I can write one myself so I’ll take what I can get.

Now that that’s working again, it’s time to figure out the new setup so I can get my blog looking like it should again, which will also teach me how to do it for my friend’s site. I probably could do it faster if there wasn’t a rampaging troupe of buffalo carousing through the house at random intervals. No wait, those are my kids.

And on another note, those of my friends who occasionally post private, friends-only messages to LiveJournal, you’ll probably want to go back and delete them now. There’s a service called frienditto that allows you to archive your friends’ posts from livejournal—even the posts your friends have marked as “friends only.” So if someone you’ve friended is using this service, your friends-only posts may now be archived and viewable without that restriction.

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